Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
2. Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts 01605
Abstract
We have studied protein synthesis in cultured cells infected with the six noncytopathic (
nc
) mutants of the Australia-Victoria strain (AV-WT) of Newcastle disease virus and their plaque-forming revertants. Virus-specific polypeptides accumulated at 30 to 63% of wild-type levels in
nc
mutant-infected cells and between 66 and 175% of wild-type levels in revertant-infected cells. An exception was the L polypeptide, which accumulated in
nc
mutant-infected cells at only 5 to 20% of the levels found in wild-type infection. The reduced accumulation of the L polypeptide did not appear to be due to increased degradation of that polypeptide. A new polypeptide (X) accumulated instead of polypeptide P in cells infected with mutants
nc
4 or
nc
16 and in virions released from them. Peptide mapping identified X as an altered form of P. A revertant of mutant
nc
4 (
nc
4S1), which forms larger hemadsorbing spots, but still does not form plaques, accumulated P instead of the X polypeptide. Thus, a lesion in P can affect virus spread without affecting cytopathogenicity. Virions of mutant
nc
7 and two naturally occurring avirulent strains of Newcastle disease virus (NJ LaSota and B1-Hitchner) contained polypeptides (F
7
and F
A
, respectively) related to, but migrating more rapidly than, F
0
in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. As previously reported for avirulent strains, a brief treatment of
nc
7 virions with trypsin converted F
7
to F and increased infectivity. Similarly, culturing
nc
7-infected cells in the presence of trypsin facilitated fusion from within and viral spread from cell to cell. A plaque-forming revertant of
nc
7 still accumulated F
7
in virions, indicating that the lesions responsible for the F
7
and noncytopathic phenotypes are genetically separable. The virulent parental strain, AV-WT, exhibited a mean embryo death time of 42 h. Both the larger-spot-forming revertant of
nc
4 (
nc
4S1) and the small-plaque-forming revertant of
nc
7 exhibited a decrease in mean embryo death time (increase in virulence) from 74 to 63 h. A second-step, plaque-forming revertant derived from
nc
4S1 (
nc
4S1R1) exhibited a further decrease in mean embryo death time from 63 to 44 h. The results suggest that the F
A
-F
7
and X lesions affect the ability of virus to spread from cell to cell. In addition, these lesions appear to be genetically separable from those responsible for the noncytopathic phenotype. However, both types of lesions cause an extension of mean embryo death time and, thus, may be relevant to virulence in vivo.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
13 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献